Foster Farms to shift away from using antibiotics in its poultry

Antibiotic-free Chicken

Foster Farms

Foster Farms announced Monday it will eliminate the use of antibiotics that are important to human medicine, in an effort to combat the rise of so-called superbugs that are resistant to treatment. The California-based poultry company recently introduced two antibiotic-free product lines, including "Simply Raised," pictured here.

Foster Farms announced Monday it will eliminate the use of antibiotics that are important to human medicine, in an effort to combat the rise of so-called superbugs that are resistant to treatment. The California-based poultry company recently introduced two antibiotic-free product lines, including "Simply Raised," pictured here.

Poultry giant Foster Farms pledges to stop using all antibiotics used to combat infection in humans

California poultry giant Foster Farms has joined the flock of meat companies eschewing the use of antibiotics, pledging to eliminate all those used to combat infection in humans.

The company's promise comes ahead of Tuesday's White House forum on the use of antibiotics, and amid rising concern that use of the drugs to raise livestock has aided the proliferation of resistant strains of bacteria among humans.

"Our company is committed to responsible growing practices that help preserve the effectiveness of antibiotics for human health and medicine," Foster Farms Chief Executive and President Ron Foster said.

Although over-prescription of antibiotics to humans has been a long-term driver of drug-resistant strains, antibiotic use for animals also has been linked to resistant strains of salmonella and campylobacter.

The company has eliminated all antibiotics that the U.S. Agriculture Department and the Food and Drug Administration deem critical to human medicine, said company spokesman Ira Brill.

"We have a long-term goal of fully eliminating all antibiotics that are used in the practice of human medicine," he said.

Brill said he could not offer a timeline for a complete elimination of antibiotics that also are prescribed to humans. “I don’t think we can put a date on that except to say that we are aggressively working towards that goal,” he said.

The CEO of Sanderson Farms, however, told the Wall Street Journal recently that he has no plans to move away from antibiotics.

Consumer pressure for antibiotics-free meat has intensified over the last several years. Sales of organic beef, pork, poultry and fish increased 11% percent from 2012 to '13, to $675 million, according to the Natural Resources Defense Council, an environmental group pushing to limit use of the drugs.

Jonathan Kaplan, director of the group's food and agriculture program, credited Foster Farms for being "on track and heading in the right direction.”

But the company's announcement “is not quite as robust as what Perdue has already accomplished or what Tyson has pledged to do," Kaplan said. "They still have committed to moving away from the medically important antibiotics, and that’s the main concern.”

About a third of the broiler chickens produced now are raised with tight restrictions on antibiotic use, according to the Natural Resources Defense Council.

"We definitely feel like we are hitting a tipping point for antibiotic stewardship in the poultry industry," Kaplan said. "This is more than a microtrend. This is a tsunami."

Foster Farms, which employs about 12,000 people nationally and has sales of $2.7 billion, is based in Livingston, Calif., and operates five production facilities in the state as well as numerous ranches, mostly in the San Joaquin Valley.

The company has battled back from a 2013 outbreak of salmonella that sickened hundreds of people in 2013, as well as a more recent cockroach infestation and rash of food safety citations at its Livingston plant.

Since then, it has revamped its food safety procedures. Measured salmonella prevalence on poultry at Foster facilities is now well below USDA and industrywide standards, Brill said.

“If you look back on the food safety issues, that was an area where we probably satisfied ourselves with being average -- and we realized you cannot lead in a lot of areas if you don't lead in all areas,” Brill said. “Right now, consumers can look at Foster Farms as about the safest chickens you can buy.”